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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 318
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Hi, just came across this shamshir, any ideas on age and or region?
Seems to have age, no markings on the blade which seems to be well made but sharpened a lot over time. Thanks for looking and your help! Regards, Erik |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: Germany
Posts: 525
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Hi Eric,
the blade seems to be a European army pattern from ~1750-1850. The crossguard is is borrowed by a Shamshir, the hilt looks like a late Viking or early Medieval long sword. In my humble opinion it is either European work of early 19th., probably older blade with a newer Shamshir like hilt. Or perhaps it comes from Iran. They made very good copies of European blades, preferably French patterns (Khorasani, "Arms and Armor from Iran" page 559-567), sometimes with an European hilt, sometimes with an Oriental hilt. The hilt construction is relatively obviously not intended for battlefield use. I believe, the signs of usage and resharpening happened with the original hilt. Regards, Roland Last edited by Roland_M; 13th April 2018 at 05:30 PM. |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 318
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Handle and crossguard have the same type of design with leaves so seem to belong together. Certainly has an European feel to it.
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 318
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No other input?
So probably an European mameluke military style sword. In this case a wild combination of shamshir and European design. Handle also shows signs of long term use so would guess blade and handle belong together. |
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